Saint Anne’s Globus ExcelsiusGPSTM system is the first technology in Massachusetts to pair robotic-assisted technology with a navigation system for spine surgery

Fall River, Mass. – For patients with spine conditions such degenerative disk disease, fracture, or spinal stenosis, there’s good news: Saint Anne’s Hospital has become the first hospital in Massachusetts to launch advanced navigation-guided, robotic-assisted technology for spine surgery.

What is navigation-guided, robotic-assisted technology for spine surgery?

The Globus ExcelsiusGPSTM system uses robotics and a sophisticated navigation system, similar to that in a car, to guide the surgeon in performing spinal procedures.

Prior to surgery, images are taken and fed into the system to create a “map” of the patient’s anatomy. During surgery, this map and live pictures act as a guide in helping the surgeon maneuver a rigid robotic arm to the exact location for precisely placed implants.

First in robotic-assisted spine care in the Greater Fall River-New Bedford region

Approved by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration in 2017, the Globus ExcelsiusGPS is the first navigation-guided, robotic-assisted surgical spine system in Massachusetts. In addition, Dr. Charles Kanaly, medical director of Saint Anne’s Hospital’s Spine Center, is the first neurosurgeon in Massachusetts to use the ExcelsiusGPS system for spine procedures.

Dr. Kanaly performed the first ExcelsiusGPS spinal fusion procedures in December. Spinal fusion joins two or more vertebrae into a single structure to prevent movement between the two bones, thus preventing back pain.

He notes that the guidance and navigation system has a number of advantages for patients.

“It is minimally invasive, which allows the surgeon to use much smaller incisions along the spine,” said Dr. Kanaly. “This means less post-surgical pain, less scarring, less blood loss, fewer complications, and faster recovery.”

Dr. Kanaly also explained that, thanks to detailed pre-surgical “mapping,” the technology’s GPS navigation system, and an ultra-steady robotic arm guided by the surgeon, it is also more precise.

“The guidance system incorporates CT imaging before surgery, as well as CT imaging and fluoroscopy during surgery that allows accurate, real-time images,” said Dr. Kanaly.

“There’s less exposure to radiation, less blood loss, and less tissue damage. All of this means we can spend less time in the operating room and help patients enjoy a shorter hospital stay, quicker recovery and faster return to doing what they love.”

Saint Anne’s also was the first in Massachusetts to offer robotic-assisted MAKO partial knee replacement surgery in 2011, followed by MAKO total hip replacement in 2012. The hospital will expand its MAKO capabilities in March with the addition of MAKO for total knee replacement. To date, more than 700 MAKO procedures have been performed.

About Saint Anne’s Hospital

Founded by the Dominican Sisters of the Presentation in 1906, Saint Anne’s Hospital in Fall River, Massachusetts, is a full-service, acute care Catholic hospital with 185 beds and satellite locations in Attleboro, Swansea, Dartmouth, New Bedford, and Stoughton, Massachusetts.